The ceremony, centered on the theme “Honoring those who gave their lives for freedom," takes place at 9:45am at Lytton Square, the tree-laden island that splits Throckmorton Avenue between Miller and Corte Madera avenues into two. The island features a trio of towering redwood trees, a flagpole and a number of places to sit. It is named for Lytton Plummer Barber, Mill Valley’s first WWI casualty, as memorialized in a plaque on the island.

According to longtime local history buff Tim Amyx, Barber grew up in Mill Valley and was 17 years old in 1917 when the United States entered World War I. He volunteered and was sent for training at Fort Lewis. Shortly after he arrived, he caught the fever of spinal meningitis. Tragically, it claimed his life ﻿﻿﻿within two weeks. He died stateside before he ever left the continental U.S., the first casualty from Mill Valley. The following spring, on Memorial Day of 1918, there was a dedication in his honor in Mill Valley, and thus Lytton Square was born.

The 411: The flag-raising ceremony is at 9:45am at Lytton Square. The parade begins at Old Mill Park at 10:30am, turning onto Miller Ave. before heading to Tam High.